I find it incredibly distressing that some people refuse to use wool as a source of fiber in knitting, weaving and other forms of fiber craft.
Most of these people are 'vegan' and do not believe in using animal products what-so-ever. I wonder if any of them use lanolin-based hand lotion. If so, they are using a by-product of wool and, therefore, are using a product made from sheep.
Wool has an elasticity that cannot be found in plant fibers; cotton, flax and hemp all fall short in this area. They also fall short in the realm of warmth and insulation. Wool is a natural insulator that keeps warmth in, keeps outside temperatures out and still, actually, breathes.
Try this with any poly-fiber and you will find it to be lacking quite a bit in comparison.
Incredibly distressing, indeed :\
Most of these people are 'vegan' and do not believe in using animal products what-so-ever. I wonder if any of them use lanolin-based hand lotion. If so, they are using a by-product of wool and, therefore, are using a product made from sheep.
Wool has an elasticity that cannot be found in plant fibers; cotton, flax and hemp all fall short in this area. They also fall short in the realm of warmth and insulation. Wool is a natural insulator that keeps warmth in, keeps outside temperatures out and still, actually, breathes.
Try this with any poly-fiber and you will find it to be lacking quite a bit in comparison.
Incredibly distressing, indeed :\
no subject
Date: 2005-08-11 02:45 am (UTC)From:And artificial is science science science.
Not that all your information is not also Science
But folks just don't see it that way
You see Faux is Real, and Real is Bogus
I however like wool. It is versatile
(no subject)
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Date: 2005-08-11 02:48 am (UTC)From:And, you know, wool is awesomely warm and squishy.
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Date: 2005-08-11 02:55 am (UTC)From:(no subject)
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Date: 2005-08-11 03:15 pm (UTC)From: